Nevertheless I think what you ask is impossible without stipulating the often unique situations that make us attracted to one person over another. Therefore what I say about person X or Y being the correct person to listen to is unique to me. As Z or A is unique to you. — Manuel
"Therapy"? — 180 Proof
Reflectively reason towards (i.e. think) better, more probitive, questions and inquiry. — 180 Proof
"Who do we ask?" Dead thinkers (i.e. history always is, never was); the living are just too distracted by their own biased — 180 Proof
'm very much an admiring student of Witty but I don't philosophize as treatment in order to be rid of "the need" to philosophize. — 180 Proof
Why is "unlearning self-immiserating habits" so important? — Shawn
Not "more". We just refrain fromHow do we tell good philosophy from bad philosophy? More philosophy? — Tom Storm
... taking / seeking these paths of least cognitive effort (i.e. sophistry).Pseudo-questions (i.e. context-free), fallacious arguments, obfuscating rhetoric and rationalizing (apologetics for) pseudo-science ... — 180 Proof
Misery (e.g. frustration, harm, illness, deprivation, bereavement, fear-terror, betrayal, injustice, etc) is categorically disvalued. Agency (i.e. an agent's social, physical, cognitive and/or affective capabilities for reducing, or preventing an increase of, self or another's miser(ies)) is usually sub-optimized whenever agents are miserable. And I cannot think of anything more "important", or inescapable, than the sisyphusean task of optimizing agency; 'unlearning habits which more likely than not makes oneself miserable or more likely than not exposes one to potential miseries' seems the most direct, accessible, praxis (i.e. reflective exercise – like a martial art) which serves that purpose. Every human endeavor is enabled-constrained by agency, no?Why is "unlearning self-immiserating habits" so important? — Shawn
More precisely: philosophers contemplate how we ought not to think.Psychologists study how we think. Philosophersstudyhowwe oughtto think. — TheMadFool
More precisely: philosophers contemplate how we ought not to think. — 180 Proof
Work on philosophy -- like work in architecture in many respects -- is really more work on oneself. On one's own conception. On how one sees things. (And what one expects of them.) (CV, 24)
How do we tell good philosophy from bad philosophy? More philosophy? — Tom Storm
I can see how philosophy might help us by offering more useful models of considering the world and better ways of managing uncertainty and fear. This could count as therapeutic. — Tom Storm
So, yeah, philosophy is therapeutic since it informs a person on how to deal with reality in the most rational way possible; philosophy, despite being speculative in some respects, ensures that we don't lose touch with reality, something the non compos mentis are awkward at. — TheMadFool
As we see in the later Wittgenstein as opposed to the earlier, thinking straddles the saying and seeing distinction. Here he came to see the importance of conceptual seeing, "seeing as". — Fooloso4
The Stoics propose "a way of life", not just "therapy". — 180 Proof
That's kind of a personal preference. How do you evaluate any of that? — Shawn
If wisdom arises from experience over time then are we just concerned with knowledge or at a more fundamental level something akin to satisfaction or even survival? What do you think? — Shawn
Could you elaborate on this last part of "seeing as"? — Shawn
Seeing as is also called seeing an aspect. The best known example is the duck-rabbit. He does not think we first interpret it and then see it one way or the other, we simply see it as a duck or a rabbit.
Further, we can see it first one way and then the other.
Perception is not simple passive reception. There is a connection between perception and conception.
What is at issue is not some visual peculiarity, but the way we look at things and seeing connections. To see connections is not to make connections.
This is a topic that has gained a lot of interest. — Fooloso4
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